New York wrongheadedly bans indoor vaping
The governor got his facts wrong. While e-cigarette usage rates have boomed over the past five years, there is no evidence that they have any significant short-term, medium-term or long-term health effects.
Andrew Stuttaford in National Review labeled Cuomo’s action “an unscientific war,” citing the Royal College of Physicians’ 2016 report.
The case for e-cigarettes can be summed up by four key recommendations from the RCP report:
- ‘E-cigarettes are marketed as consumer products and are proving much more popular than NRT (nicotine replacement therapy) as a substitute and competitor for tobacco cigarettes.’
- ‘E-cigarettes appear to be effective when used by smokers as an aid to quitting smoking.’
- ‘… the hazard to health arising from long-term vapour inhalation from the e-cigarettes available today is unlikely to exceed 5% of the harm from smoking tobacco.’
- ‘…in the interests of public health it is important to promote the use of e-cigarettes, NRT and other non-tobacco nicotine productsas widely as possible as a substitute for smoking.’
Ignoring clear evidence of vapor’s relative safety and widespread use in smoking cessation, politicians and public health officials in New York and elsewhere support the deadly cigarette status quo.
Beyond science issues, vaping bans have little impact on consumer behavior. E-cigarette vapor dissipates quickly, so while bans may stifle e-cigarette use in public settings, enthusiasts know that they can continue vaping indoors; if they are discreet, no one will know.
The biggest flaw in vaping bans is the false implication—if not the explicit false claim—that vapor is as dangerous as smoke. In the war on vaping by Gov. Cuomo and others, such deception misleads American tobacco users and denies them use of proven harm-reduction aids. That is the denial, not the promotion, of public health.
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